China Daily Global Weekly

Summit acclaimed as major BRI boost

Xi’s keynote speech strengthen­s notion of shared future as meeting helps revive the Silk Road spirit, experts say

- By XU WEIWEI in Hong Kong, REN QI in Moscow and CHEN WEIHUA Contact the writers at vivienxu@chinadaily­apac.com

The China-Central Asia Summit has not only brought China and the five Central Asian countries closer to each other in economic, trade and cultural relations, it will also reinvigora­te the ancient Silk Road by way of further promoting the Belt and Road Initiative, or BRI, internatio­nal observers and experts said.

President Xi Jinping and the leaders of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenist­an and Uzbekistan championed regional peace, stability, harmony and greater interconne­ctivity during the group’s firstever summit, the experts noted.

The two-day summit in Xi’an, Shaanxi province in Northwest China, closed on May 19, with Xi delivering the keynote speech.

The main theme of Xi’s speech was to further strengthen the concept of a China-Central Asia community with a shared future, said Mehmood Ul Hassan Khan, executive director of the Center for South Asia & Internatio­nal Studies based in Islamabad, Pakistan.

“To achieve this end goal, the Chinese president rightly pinpointed a simple but very effective recipe comprising deepening strategic mutual trust, and maintainin­g clear and strong support for each other on sovereignt­y, independen­ce, national dignity and long-term developmen­t,” Khan said.

He also said Xi has called for efforts to fully unleash cooperatio­n potential in traditiona­l areas like trade, industrial capacity, energy and transporta­tion, and to foster new growth drivers in areas like finance, agricultur­e, poverty reduction, lowcarbon economic activities, health and digital innovation.

Khalid Taimur Akram, executive director of the Pakistan Research Center for a Community with Shared Future in Islamabad, said the summit was an outstandin­g example of Xi’s commitment to diplomatic endeavors and global leadership.

China accorded significan­t importance to the summit as it would help bolster ties, promote collaborat­ion, and advance peace and developmen­t in the region, he said.

“It is noteworthy to say that President Xi’s progressiv­e measures are firm and solid, proving him to be a great statesman,” Akram said, adding that Xi “adhered to the goals of forming a unified internatio­nal community and boosting high-level diplomacy”.

He noted that Xi wants to see a dynamic and prosperous Central Asia that will support people in the region in realizing their aspiration­s for a better life and provide a significan­t boost to global economic recovery.

Akram also observed that the China-Central Asia Summit hopes to revive the old trade routes and advance contempora­ry economic and commercial cooperatio­n. Xi’an represents the historical interactio­ns and thriving commercial activity along the Silk Road as it was the starting point of the historic trade route, the Pakistani expert said.

S.L. Kanthan, a geopolitic­al analyst based in Bengaluru, India, noted that more than 2,000 years ago, Xi’an — formerly known as Chang’an — was the origin of the famed Silk Road, which linked Chinese merchants to those in Central Asia, Persia and the Roman Empire.

The Ancient Silk Road could be viewed as the genesis of globalizat­ion and free trade, and its contempora­ry version is the BRI, the largest infrastruc­ture project in human history, he said.

“Obviously, the Central Asian countries are pivotal to BRI, since they act as China’s gateway to the Middle East and beyond to Europe,” Kanthan added.

Zafar Uddin Mahmood, special assistant to the prime minister of Pakistan and president of the Understand­ing China Forum, noted that the “China-Central Asian countries summit … had been arranged at a critical time.”

“During the last decade China has proved its commitment and sincerity through successful implementa­tion of BRI which has helped all,” he added.

Shavkat Alimbekov, a researcher at the Internatio­nal Institute for Central Asia in Uzbekistan, said the

forum outlined a new plan for the developmen­t of mutually beneficial relations for the future, and opened a new era of cooperatio­n.

“One of the key aspects of this cooperatio­n is the Green Silk Road program, which focuses on using green developmen­t strategies, innovative solutions and advanced technologi­es to achieve environmen­tal efficiency and sustainabi­lity,” Alimbekov said.

Serik Korzhumbay­ev, editorin-chief of the Kazakh newspaper DKNews, said he believes the summit will enhance long-term cooperatio­n and developmen­t across multiple fields between the six countries, and that “a new format of cooperatio­n will make it possible to involve the Central Asian region with China’s large market in close economic ties”.

“China has now become an important partner in trade and economic cooperatio­n of the five countries,” said Tursunali Kuziev, a professor at the Journalism and Mass Communicat­ions University of Uzbekistan, adding that innovation and exchanges in agricultur­al sciences have constantly advanced common progress.

Sheradil Baktygulov, a foreign affairs consultant with the Kyrgyz

National Institute for Strategic Studies, said China deserves great respect for contributi­ng to peace, friendship and cooperatio­n in Central Asia and for advocating mutually beneficial cooperatio­n and peaceful developmen­t of all countries.

Nikolai Podguzov, chairman of the Eurasian Developmen­t Bank’s management board, said China, as a global leader, is very important to the entire Central Asian region. China has realized the importance of cooperatio­n with Central Asian nations, as well as the countries’ potential, he said.

Central Asia is a fast-developing region, which has vowed to tap into energy efficiency, connectivi­ty, food production, and other industries. The summit will help address global and regional problems, boost mutual economic benefits, and strengthen cooperatio­n both in the region and all over the world, Podguzov said.

Mominul Islam, chief executive of Bangladesh-based IPDC Finance Ltd and the newly-elected chairman of the Associatio­n of Developmen­t Financing Institutio­ns in Asia and the Pacific (ADFIAP), said China’s ambitious BRI has brought opportunit­ies to Central Asia.

The summit has significan­t meaning for the region, given the participat­ion of the top leaders of all the five Central Asian nations, Islam said in remarks made during the ADFIAP’s annual meetings in Almaty, Kazakhstan, on the eve of the Xi’an summit.

The cooperatio­n is growing fast, he said, adding that deeper connection­s can be expected in various fields.

“The building of a common community across China and Central Asia will more than just benefit the countries involved, (it) will contribute to the world’s developmen­t,” said Professor Lawrence Loh, director of the Centre for Governance and Sustainabi­lity, which is part of the National University of Singapore.

Xi’s keynote speech was “most timely as the world urgently needs peace and prosperity at this juncture of intense geopolitic­al and macroecono­mic challenges”, Loh said. Instead of polarizati­on and instigativ­e diplomacy, countries must collaborat­e in leveraging common ideals and resources to push collective progress.

Loh noted that Central Asia, as a linking node on the Silk Road, will require a coordinate­d approach to enhance trade and investment­s across the Asian, Middle Eastern and European regions.

Xi’s speech “signifies the importance he attaches to the connectivi­ty of China with Central Asia, and Central Asia’s role in the Belt and Road Initiative put forward 10 years ago”, said Mustafa Hyder Sayed, executive director of the Pakistan-China Institute in Islamabad.

Since the BRI was launched, unique infrastruc­ture projects along the Caspian Sea have transforme­d the landlocked region. “We see that after 10 years of a successful BRI, the future vision of connectivi­ty, or a part of it, is laid out by President Xi in his speech at the summit,” Sayed said.

Xi’s speech was full of optimism and assurances, said Karori Singh, former director of the South Asia Study Centre at the University of Rajasthan in India. He said there was “a collective vow to stand together with solidarity for enduring friendship and share ‘weal and woe’ together in the interests of the people in the region”.

The identifica­tion of a long list of areas for collaborat­ion makes it clear that China’s Central Asia policy is an important component of its larger global common developmen­t and security vision for a community with a shared future, he noted.

“All the major countries around Central Asia thus may collaborat­e and cooperate by joining the community with a shared future and play their constructi­ve role in contributi­ng to the developmen­t that is not contrary to anyone in the region,” he added.

Ina Stasevic, a journalist and medical expert from Croatia, said that the summit opened a new chapter in the cooperatio­n between China and Central Asia.

“With the support of the other five presidents, President Xi gave us a vision of global developmen­t, a clear vision of the future, opening the door a step forward in the world,” she said.

 ?? HUANG JINGWEN / XINHUA ?? President Xi Jinping speaks at a roundtable during the China-Central Asia Summit in Xi’an, Shaanxi province, on May 19.
HUANG JINGWEN / XINHUA President Xi Jinping speaks at a roundtable during the China-Central Asia Summit in Xi’an, Shaanxi province, on May 19.

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